Platinum vs Gold: Choosing the Right Metal for Your Bespoke Engagement Ring
Buying a diamond can feel overwhelming at first. There’s plenty of information online, but much of it is technical, contradictory, or focused on “rules” rather than what truly matters: choosing a stone that looks beautiful in real life and feels right for the person wearing it.
At Bonnie Private Jewellery, the approach is simple—make the process clear, personal, and guided. Whether you’re designing a bespoke engagement ring or investing in a meaningful piece of fine jewellery, here’s how to choose a diamond with confidence.
At Bonnie Private Jewellery, the approach is simple—make the process clear, personal, and guided. Whether you’re designing a bespoke engagement ring or investing in a meaningful piece of fine jewellery, here’s how to choose a diamond with confidence.
1) Start with the wearer, not the specifications
Before discussing carat weight or clarity grades, think about the person who will wear the diamond every day.
In this first stage, we’ll usually cover:
In this first stage, we’ll usually cover:
- Style: classic and timeless, modern and minimal, vintage-inspired, bold and statement
- Lifestyle: hands-on job, travel, sports, daily wear
- Preference: subtle elegance vs maximum sparkle; understated vs eye-catching
This step matters because the “perfect” diamond isn’t the biggest or the most expensive—it’s the one that suits the wearer beautifully.
2) Understand the 4Cs (and what they don’t tell you)
You’ll hear a lot about the 4Cs: Cut, Colour, Clarity, and Carat. They are useful, but they don’t always predict how a diamond will look once it’s set and worn.
Cut (the most important for sparkle)
Cut is not the shape—it’s the quality of how the stone is faceted. A well-cut diamond can look brighter and more lively than a larger stone with weaker cut quality.
If sparkle matters to you, prioritise cut. It’s where the “magic” comes from.
If sparkle matters to you, prioritise cut. It’s where the “magic” comes from.
Colour grades can feel confusing, especially because what you see depends on:
Colour grades can feel confusing, especially because what you see depends on:
- the metal colour (platinum/white gold vs yellow/rose gold)
- the diamond shape
- personal sensitivity to warmth
Many clients prefer a balanced approach: a colour that looks bright to the eye without paying for a grade that isn’t noticeable in everyday wear.
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